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Nate Williams Illustration & Hand Lettering

Nate Williams Illustration & Hand Lettering

Sophie MORILLE Owl At Home by Arnold Lobel Owl at Home (1975) is a children's picture book by Arnold Lobel an author and illustrator. The book consists of five delightful tales that will be loved by all ages. I don't own this book but after reading some of the reviews here, I am certainly considering. Some of the stories are silly, some are bitter-sweet and some that would be remembered forever. If you like giving books as gifts to the special little one in your life then get this one now from here for the holidays that are just around the corner. Have a fun-filled weekend! xo shivani Sell Your Illustration What do you get if you cross MiniCards with magnets? Moognets! We're seeing more and more moognets out there, and one of our favourite moognet-makers is illustrator Luisa Vidal, aka Etsy seller Fashion Fuchsia. Luisa sells her moognets as beautifully packaged themed sets. Bright yellow suns shine next to redheads in sunglasses. Blue boys and purple girls reach for each other's hands from their respective MiniCards. As well as magnets, Luisa makes MiniCard bookmarks and uses Postcards to showcase her illustrations. Hi Luisa! I've always loved drawing – one of my earliest memories is of my Dad teaching me how to draw a cup of tea! Do you produce your work by hand, on computer, or a combination of both? It's a combination. How long have you been selling on Etsy? I've been selling on Etsy since March 2009. What made you decide to use MOO in your work? I decided to create my own products because I often go to stores and can't find what I'm after – little gifts with a special touch. Oh yes...

isabellearsenault - Blog archival fine art giclee print semiabstract by gretchenmist Atelier Radar Jeudi 5 décembre 2013 4 05 /12 /Déc /2013 09:38 Bonjour ! L'atelier Radar ouvre ses portes le week end du 14/15 pour une vente spéciale noël! Des sérigraphies, petites et grandes, à accrocher, à porter, à offrir (entre 3 et 30 euros pour des tirages limités!) Des céramiques ,des dessins originaux ou non... Venez compléter vos achats de noël et/ou boire une thé/café avec nous entre 14h et 20h au18 rue Geoffroy Drouet, rue perpendiculaire à la rue du maréchal Joffre, tout près de l'église st Clément. Au plaisir de vous voir (Et n'hésitez pas à faire tourner l'information) l'équipe radar : Yoko, Yann et Julia

Margherita Micheli I migliori illustratori di sempre secondo gli illustratori italiani « centostorie – microblog sui libri per bambini Per un anno abbiamo chiesto agli illustratori italiani quali fossero i loro maestri e i loro colleghi preferiti. Dalle risposte ne abbiamo ricavato tre classifiche: Italia, mondo, storia dell’arte. La rilevazione non ha alcun valore scientifico (ma anche no), ma è senza dubbio una maniera divertente di continuare ad esplorare le fondamenta del nostro immaginario. Italia In testa, come era facile prevedere, ci sono i maestri storici. 1) Emanuele Luzzati 2) Bruno Munari 3) Beatrice Alemagna 4) Lorenzo Mattotti 5) Gianluigi Toccafondo 6) Nicoletta Ceccoli 7) Guido Scarabottolo 8 ) Gek Tessaro 9) Pia Valentinis 10) Anna Laura Cantone 11) Beppe Giacobbe 12) Mara Cerri 13) Francesca Ghermandi 14) Vittoria Facchini 15) Sara Fanelli 16) Chiara Carrer 17) Sergio Tofano 18 ) Alessandra Cimatoribus 19) Roberto Innocenti 20) Gipi 1) Marc Chagall 2) Jean Michel Basquiat 3) Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio 4) Pablo Picasso 5) Jean Dubuffet 6) Gustave Doré

Igor Oleynikov. Russian Illustrator (1) Pages Sponsored Links Sunday Igor Oleynikov. Russian Illustrator (1) Igor Oleynikov (b. 1953) studied at the Moscow Institute of Chemical Engineering. {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' {*style:<a href=' Email ThisBlogThis! at 12:16 AM No comments: Create a Link

Quit Your Day Job: Julie Ann Art Julie Ann wants to make people “laugh their asses off,” and she’s doing a dynamite job of it in her Etsy shop, JulieAnnArt. She approaches her designs and business plan honestly and realistically. “A lot of my design ideas come from conversations in my daily life,” she says. “Oftentimes I’ll be laughing with someone and a lightbulb will go off in my head like, ‘Hey, that’s a card!’” Though she has nearly 16,000 sales, success didn’t happen overnight for Julie — she’s been growing her Etsy shop for five years. When she decided to switch from painting as her main medium to her current greeting card business, she noticed quite a jump in sales. Here Julie talks about becoming a full-time seller, the challenge of taking custom orders, and how putting time into her delicious blog keeps customers coming back. What was your biggest challenge as an Etsy seller when you started, and how did you overcome it? The biggest challenge was just finding my way to where I am now. Yes!

Raquel Aparicio | Unique Illustrations | Interesting Art Raquel Aparicio has an amazing portfolio, with images that start out as one thing and somehow change into another. Below is a sampling of her portfolio, but you should definitely head over to her website, (which is Spanish) and check out her entire portfolio. I know I spent the better part of an hour checking out her works and I’m sure you will too. This one may actually be my favorite of her portfolio. There’s probably some deeper meaning to be found here about the Industrial Revolution, but I just really like this piece. Fitting as her entire site is in Spanish. Great way of doing the stripes on the Zebra Something about the chickens coming home to roost? Took me a few minutes to see the grains on the skeleton and realize that it’s supposed to be made of wood. Tags: antler tree art chicken house comb forest dancing shell industrial key piano fork Raquel Aparicio russian dolls scissor vines wooden skeleton zebra forest

European Street Team (EST) - Etsy Teams The Artist’s Survival Kit June 8th, 2010 The Artist’s Survival Kit For the really bad days, for the days when you want to quit, when you feel like everything you do is shit, when you feel your self-esteem plummet, when you decide that you would rather wait tables for a living, when you start to think you will never make a living making art, when you are working on something and feel like you hate it more than you’ve ever hated anything in your life, when someone makes an offhand remark about your work and afterwards you feel dejected, when you wish you had gone to school for accounting, when you start to believe that maybe your family was right, when you want to lie in bed for a month and eat chips. It pays to have a sense of humor. The artist’s survival kit offers some help . directions: 1. print out the following five pages (cardstock would be best). 2. cut each page into four sections. 3. keep for yourself, or give to artist friends who could use a little pick me up.

Teiera

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